Catching up with golf trick shot artist Tania Tare, who was inspired at age 12 by a Tiger Woods commercial (you know the one)

At age 12, Tania Tare saw the famous TV commercial featuring Tiger Woods juggling a golf ball. That’s all it took.

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FOUNTAIN HILLS, Ariz. — At age 12, Tania Tare wasn’t into golf yet. But a commercial featuring Tiger Woods juggling and then hitting a golf ball out of the air caught her eye. Fast forward 20 years and Tare can only look back in amazement.

“If I think about how it all started, it’s actually pretty crazy,” she said.

Tare, 32, grew up in New Zealand, played collegiately at Florida International, and lived briefly in California before settling in Arizona. She vividly recalls that day two decades ago when she watched the Nike commercial of Woods casually bouncing a ball on a wedge several times, going up and under his legs before swinging at the ball and launching it to the moon.

“I saw that when I was about 12 and I learned how to do that without ever hitting a golf ball off the ground. I thought that was the coolest thing I’ve ever seen,” she said. “I didn’t even really like associate it in my head that it was golf. … I didn’t hit my first golf ball in a normal way until I was like 14. So technically, yeah, that’s probably the first thing I did that related to golf.”

“I didn’t start doing trick shots because ‘I’m going to be the best trickshot artist in the world.’ I just did them for my friends and family who thought that golf was kind of boring,” she said. “I was like, ‘This isn’t boring!’ And then all these people really liked them and all these opportunities came up and I was like, ‘Oh, this is a thing?’ and now it’s literally a thing that I do.”

The opportunities did indeed come up. And they still do.

Tare has sponsorships with Ping, OnCore golf balls, watchmaker Audemars Piguet—for which she shot a cool commercial in a parking structure which hardly even features the watch—and adidas, which provides her apparel. She is frequently booked for events and has a crazy following on social media. Her Instagram account has more than 300,000 followers.

Tania Tare
Golf trick shot artist Tania Tare at Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Fountain Hills, Arizona. Photo by Todd Kelly/Golfweek

A once aspiring LPGA player, Tare’s biggest foe has been injuries. She says she’s had three wrist surgeries and was told she needed a fourth but she’s hesitant to try that again, considering the first three didn’t work.

“Now I’m at the point where I’m like, ‘I don’t know if it’s meant for me,'” she says of reaching her LPGA dream. Her golfing life simply took her down a different path.

“I tell people all the time I feel like I really lucked out,” she said. “Ninety percent of my life is trick shots and all the stuff surrounding it. I get to stay in the golf world. I’m actually in the golf world in a better way than I was when I was a pro and I was grinding.

“For the first patch when I was still actually trying to play [on tour] I was making money off the trick shot stuff and then spending it all on trying to be a pro golfer and it was like, the feeling was way different. Now I’ve gotten to do so many things, meet so many people that I definitely wouldn’t have had that chance if I was just a pro trying to get on tour.”

Tania Tare
Golf trick shot artist Tania Tare at Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Fountain Hills, Arizona. Photo by Todd Kelly/Golfweek

Before the pandemic, she said she was home about three nights a month.

Tare recently played (regular golf) and then performed (trick shot golf) at an enhancement ceremony for Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Fountain Hills, Arizona. She talked about other gigs on her upcoming schedule, including one a Desert Mountain in North Scottsdale. She also committed to playing in the Arizona Women’s Open.

“I wrote on Instagram that I would enter if I got more than 200 comments and it got over 1,000. I gotta keep my word,” she said with a smile.

Tania Tare
Golf trick shot artist Tania Tare at Eagle Mountain Golf Club in Fountain Hills, Arizona. Photo by Todd Kelly/Golfweek

Tare hasn’t been home to New Zealand since before COVID but has plans to fly back early in 2022 if the pandemic doesn’t take a turn for the worse.

In the meantime, she’ll keep making those fun videos. One of her more famous involved a yoga ball and a red Solo cup. The video is just seven seconds long but took countless tries to pull off. The back story is pretty great, too.

“That one, on the ball, my family was waiting for me to go to dinner, it was my birthday. I was like, ‘No! I have to!'” she said. “Once I start a trick, once I have an idea, I just pretty much do it till I’m sore.”

Meet Coach Rusty: One of the world’s best golf trick shot artists

Ryan Rustand, also known as Coach Rusty, on his success in the golf trick shot world.

Ryan Rustand, known as Coach Rusty on social media, has been shaping and creating brilliant trick shots since before he can remember.

Before entering the trick shot world, Rustand had hopes of pursuing a high level golf career. He previously ran junior golf programs in Virginia which is where he picked up his nickname. He moved from Virginia to Florida in hopes to advance his game to the professional level.

As he continued to pursue the sport, golf began to feel like a “grind” to Rustand and he found he was not enjoying the sport as much as he once used to.

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“I want to be the guy that feels like he doesn’t work a day in his life because he enjoys what he does so much,” said Rustland. Rustand is currently sitting at 146,000 Instagram followers, 57,300 TikTok followers and 2,450 YouTube subscribers.

At first nobody, including his family, understood what he was doing or what direction he was trying to head in. As his popularity started to grow and he became a golf internet sensation, he began to gain support from his friends and family.

“Having people from all corners of the earth saying they’ve seen me on the internet was when my family realized that it was something they could support and get behind,” said Rustand.

Rustand recently announced he signed a multi-year deal with Cobra and Puma Golf.

You can hear more about Coach Rusty and what he has in store for 2021 on the latest episode of the, “WHY YOU SUCK AT GOLF!” podcast.

Watch: Tania Tare’s latest trick-shot video is pretty incredible

She’s yet to breakthrough on the LPGA – and realizes the chances for that are dwindling – but New Zealand-born Tania Tare continues to entertain her social media following with some pretty incredible trick shots. Tare is just shy of 300,000 …

She’s yet to breakthrough on the LPGA — and realizes the chances for that are dwindling — but New Zealand-born Tania Tare continues to entertain her social media following with some pretty incredible trick shots.

Tare is just shy of 300,000 followers on Instagram, making her one of golf’s top social media influencers. She’s got numerous sponsorship deals and has played in one LPGA event, pretty impressive for someone who aspired only to be a juggler before seeing a Tiger Woods commercial.

In her most recent post, she balances a golf ball, knocks it off her knee and then smashes it with a driver in mid-air.

“I’m obsessed with trick shots. I love being able to challenge myself not only physically, but creatively as well,” she said in a note to Golfweek. “I will admit though, I’m convinced cup tricks are going to be the death of me. The level of preciseness makes them so frustrating, but so satisfying when you get it.”

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Tare had previously hoped to gain fame on the LPGA but numerous wrist surgeries have made that dream more unlikely. She continues to amass a huge following online, however, and has been on television as guests on both “The James Corden Show” and “Tosh.O.” Tare also has associations with Ping, Adidas and OnCore Golf, among others.

“There is definitely a good and bad side. I am beyond grateful for all social media has helped me with and if I did it all again, I’d use it again.” she told Golf Australia. “I do think though that I have pretty solid grounding and that’s why I am able to utilize social media but not get emotionally attached to the unhealthy side that comes with it.

“But at the end of the day, the positives of the use of social far outweigh the bad for me. I’m a big believer in encouraging people to use social media if they are able to see it purely as a tool. The minute you see it as more than that, I think that’s where it begins to be unhealthy for someone. And that’s something you have to answer honestly for yourself.”

Here’s a look at a previous trick Tare pulled off.

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This footage of Cameron Davis hitting righty and lefty is downright hypnotizing

The YouTube video of a teenage Cameron Davis smoothly striking an iron right-handed then dropping the club to hit left-handed is wild.

Trick-shot artistry comes in all forms, but the art of switch-hitting falls into a category all its own.

Often, a player swinging with his non-dominant side looks a little clunky, no matter how talented he or she is (re: Rickie Fowler and Justin Thomas playing a spring-quarantine golf match as lefties at Michael Jordan’s golf course, The Grove XXIII in Hobe Sound, Florida – neither broke 90).

Enter Australian Cameron Davis. The 25-year-old showed up with something less than his A-game at the Country Club of Jackson on Sunday, thus sliding down the leaderboard in the final round. But the switch-hitting footage that emerged from 2014 makes Davis a winner regardless.

The below YouTube video of a teenage Davis smoothly striking an iron right-handed (which is how he normally plays) then dropping the club to hit a ball left-handed is downright mesmerizing. If you didn’t know better, you might question which way he actually plays this game (he is, in fact, righty).

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Golfweek Top 5: Counting down the best trick shots of the week

Check out the best trick shots of the week on Golfweek Top 5– Golfweek’s new video series.

Desperate for impressive shots while most of professional golf is on hold?

Welcome to Golfweek Top 5, where we rank the best trick shots of the week.

With the masses self-isolating due to the coronavirus pandemic, here’s a new series created to showcase the talents of golfers and fans who are stuck inside.

This week, our finalists range from a former NBA player to a dad stuck with three kids in quarantine in South Ireland.

If you have a trick shot that deserves to be included in the next edition of the Golfweek Top 5, tweet the video of your trick shot to Golfweek with the hashtag #GolfweekTop5. We’ll show the top five videos on the next countdown.

Watch the latest edition of Golfweek Top 5 below.

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Golfweek Top 5

Golfweek’s JuliaKate Culpepper counts down the top 5 trick shots of the week. Submit your trick shots by tweeting them to @golfweek with the hashtag, #golfweektop5.

Golfweek’s JuliaKate Culpepper counts down the top 5 trick shots of the week. Submit your trick shots by tweeting them to @golfweek with the hashtag, #golfweektop5.

Watch: Texas sophomore Cole Hammer’s pool-side trick shot

Texas sophomore Cole Hammer is passing the time stuck at home by making trick shots.

Cole Hammer has some serious skill.

As a freshman at Texas he maintained a sub-70 scoring average and tallied consecutive T-1 finishes in the spring of 2019. In a sophomore campaign cut short by the coronavirus pandemic, Hammer had two top-10 finishes for the Longhorns.

Before heading to Austin, the Houston native and former world No. 1 amateur played in the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay, was a member of the 2017 U.S. Junior Presidents Cup team, earned co-medalist honors at the 2018 U.S. Amateur before losing in the semifinals to eventual champion Viktor Hovland and won the 2018 U.S. Amateur Four-Ball.

His talent on the course also translates to backyard, pool-side trick shots.

A+ effort. 10/10 creativity. The only question now is, what will Hammer do next?

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Golfweek Top 5: Counting down the best trick shots of the week

Check out the best trick shots of the week on Golfweek Top 5– Golfweek’s new video series.

Desperate for jaw-dropping shots while most professional golf is on hold?

Welcome to Golfweek Top 5, where we rank the best trick shots of the week.

With the masses self-isolating due to the coronavirus pandemic, here’s a new series created to showcase the talents of golfers and fans who are stuck inside.

This week, our finalists range from an NFL quarterback to a family in New Zealand. Our finalists set up courses in their backyards and in their homes and used everything including a simulator, a cup someone was drinking out of and a game console.

If you have a trick shot that deserves to be included in the next edition of the Golfweek Top 5, tweet the video of your trick shot to Golfweek with the hashtag #GolfweekTop5. We’ll show the top five videos on the next countdown.

Watch the first edition of Golfweek Top 5 below.

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Steph Curry calls glass on this golf trick shot

Steph Curry filmed a golf video as part of a social media campaign called #playingthrough

We all know that Steph Curry loves golf like few other celebrities.

So, it shouldn’t really come as much of a surprise to anyone that when the two-time MVP and Golden State Warrior All-Pro began to get a little stir crazy hunkering down at home, where California is under a “stay at home” order in an attempt to prevent the further spread of COVID-19, he grabbed his golf club and took part in a social media campaign called #playingthrough.

The video is just eight seconds long, but it’s as much fun as watching Curry drain 3s from way downtown. He appears to be in the foyer of his home and has a good lie on a throw rug and pitches a ball off the front door – CBS commentator Bill Rafferty would say, “and the kiss!” – that bounces in and out of the cup that serves as his hole.

“It was in!” Curry screams. Curry’s reaction is priceless, and gave us the #content we so desperately needed on a quiet Friday night in the sports world. Thanks, Steph.

The story behind that viral trick shot, water pong video

This golf-themed viral video from Garrett Clark and Matt Scharff from Kansas City features an elaborate course design and big payoff.

A new decade, a new viral video.

This golf-themed viral video that kicked off 2020 is courtesy of Garrett Clark and Matt Scharff from Kansas City, Kansas.

Clark, 19, and Scharff, 20, who met competing in junior golf at the Kansas City Golf Association, were inspired by trick-shot videos on Tik Tok and decided to make their own.

Clark admitted designing the indoor course, which features two sets of stairs, some barstools and a set of pots, was tough and took about an hour to construct. Once the course was done, it took about four hours of trial and error to get the shot seen in their viral video.

“One of the hardest parts of this video was the handoffs of the cell phone,” Clark wrote to Golfweek in an email. “Three hand offs!!! We kept the ball in frame the entire time and did a pretty decent job keeping it steady.”

The video, filmed by Clark and Scharff on Clark’s iPhone X at Clark’s home in Kansas City and posted on Jan. 1, has been viewed almost 700,000 times on their @gm_golf Twitter account and has been picked up by ESPN and other viral video Twitter accounts.

Clark putts the ball at the beginning of the video and Scharff douses himself with the cup of water in which the ping pong ball lands at the end, but they weren’t the only two stars of the video. Clark made sure to mention Annie the dog was a key component to the viral video. She’s sleeping under the ladder 13 seconds into the video.

When asked what Clark and Scharff’s reactions were to their video taking off the way it did, Clark responded, “Viral videos is what we do and happy to see it doing so well.”

Scharff also have a YouTube page on which he and Clark create other trick shot videos.

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